| Literature DB >> 15863394 |
Heather G Jørgensen1, Sarah D McLellan, James F Crossan, Adam S G Curtis.
Abstract
Following tendon injury, severe loss of function often occurs either as a result of obliteration of the synovial canal with fibrous scar tissue or from rupture of the repaired tendon. The role of cell engineering in tendon repair is to promote strong and rapid healing of tendon whilst at the same time facilitating rapid reconstitution of the synovial canal. Modification of the immediate inflammatory response around healing tendon has been found to be of value. Experimentally this has been achieved by neutralisation of transforming growth factor-beta over the first 3 days following injury, or by blockade of inflammatory cell binding to the CS-1 locus on fibronectin with an anti-VLA-4 antibody, or with the synthetic VLA-4 inhibitor, CS-1 peptide, in a rat model of tendon transection. It is concluded from this pilot study that the treatments described hold promise in improving outcomes of the common clinical problem of tendon injury in man.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15863394 DOI: 10.1016/j.cyto.2004.12.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cytokine ISSN: 1043-4666 Impact factor: 3.861